features traditional wisdom and scientific breakthroughs by B. Mishra
n India, rice has been
grown since time immemorial. Here, the rice grain has always been considered sacred. The spirit of the Divine is believed to reside in each rice grain. Rice is a symbol of fertility and being used in worship wherein grains are offered to God. Rice is the essence, a way of life and it is blended with festivals, traditions, rituals, and each walk of life of the rice farmers. It is seen in music (particularly folk songs), poems, art, and sculpture. Large parts of folklore have become interwoven with rice culture. For more than half of humanity, rice is life, providing its nurturing energy. Indeed, many consider the crop as the root of civilization. As a rice researcher for nearly four decades and as project director of the Directorate of Rice Research (DRR) for 5 years,I realized the need for establishing a rice museum that depicted a combination of traditional wisdom and the major breakthroughs of science and technology in breeding (release of Sub1 varieties and hybrids), management practices (direct seeding and aerobic rice), pest and disease management, crop resource management (agronomy), postharvest technology, engineering, biotechnology, and genomics.
R.M. SUNDARAM, DRR senior scientist in
biotechnology (second from right in upper photo), gives special guests a tour of the Rice Museum including (from left) Bas Bouman, GRiSP director; J.K. Ladha, IRRI representative for India; and (extreme right) Matthew Morell, IRRI deputy director for research. The bottom photo shows the panoramic mural in the background.
An integral and crucial part of
the DRR Rice Museum is a mural painting that gives a panoramic view of the various operations of
ENTRANCE TO the DRR Rice Museum in Hyderabad.
traditional and science-based rice
farming. It depicts the different rice ecosystemsirrigated, upland, shallow lowland, semideep water,deep water, and floating rice. It also shows seed production plots and hill rice. The mural illustrates how rice farmers lives are governed and regulated by the seasonal rhythms of rice growing sowing, planting, fertilizing, weeding, irrigating, harvesting, threshing, and hulling. Their lives from birth to death are bound to rice. As the staff and collaborators of the DRR celebrate its 50th anniversary, the DRR Rice Museum is observing its 10th year of operation, having opened its doors on 31 March 2005. The panoramic mural, particularly, has been a solemn place for staff and visitors to pause in the museumto take some quiet time to reflect on the importance and significance of Indias rich and diverse rice culture.
Dr. Mishra was project director for the
DRR, 2000-05. During his time, 144 inbred rice varieties and 9 hybrids suited for different rice ecologies were released. He facilitated the development of hybrid rice in India, which is now planted on around 2.4 million hectares. He coordinated the largest AICRIP network on SECTIONS OF the mural show various rice up to that time, having 47 Indian rice farm operations. See a funded projects and more than larger segment in the centerfold on the 90 cooperating centers with next page. nearly 500 rice scientists.